Ruin Nation

Guest Post by Jim Kunstler

The ruins of Mary McClellan Hospital stand on hill overlooking the village of Cambridge, New York, in what was a “flyover” corner of the country until the planes stopped flying. The hospital cornerstone was laid July 4 1917. The USA had entered the war against Germany a few months earlier. The “Spanish” flu pandemic kicked off in January, 1918.  The hospital opened in January 1919. The flu burned out a year later. The hospital shut down for good in 2003.

I’ve lived around here for decades and never actually got a look at the place until I went up there on a blustery spring Saturday before Easter to look around. I like to read landscapes and the human imprint upon them. This one is a ghost story, not just of the bygone souls who came and went here, but of an entire society, the nation that we used to be and stopped being not so long ago.

This is the old main building today. It’s astounding how quickly buildings begin to rot when the human life within them is gone. The style was Beaux Arts Institutional, seen everywhere across America in that period in schools, libraries, museums, and hospitals, an austere neoclassicism that radiated decorum in a confident and well-run society ­– because that is what we were then. Note especially, the entrance and the beautiful bronze marquee above it. The message is this: You enter through a portal of beauty to a place of hope and trust.

This is Mary McClellan Hospital not long after it opened. The site itself, on its hill, with views east across the state line to the Green Mountains, speaks of authority and command. The America of 1919 was a deeply hierarchical society. Today we regard hierarchy as a bane and a curse. The truth is, it is absolutely required if you expect to live in a well-run society, and proof of that is the disordered mess of bureaucratic irresponsibility we live in today, with virtually every institution failing – well before the Covid-19 virus arrived on the scene — and nobody called to account for anything anymore. Hierarchy must be fit to scale to function successfully. In small institutions like this, everybody knows who is responsible for what. That’s what makes authority credible.

 

 

These are the ruins of the nursing school associated with the hospital (and also associated with Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, 25 miles west). The nurses lived here, in Florence Nightingale Hall. In the early 20th century, the profession favored young, unmarried women whose allegiance and attention to the patients would not be distracted by the needs of a family. Was that exploitation? Or was it simply an intelligent way to organize a hospital subculture? The nurses lived here very comfortably. The institution cared for them, literally.

 

There’s no record available of what exactly these buildings were for. The one in the foreground has a cut stone sign that says “The Junior” on it. I infer that this may have been where a couple of young, staff, resident physicians lived, young men probably, just out of their internships, close at hand and on-call for emergencies. The building in the background is a rather grand country cottage, possibly the residence of the chief surgeon or the hospital director. The hospital was, after all, a community unto itself, and it was important that authority have a visible presence there all the time. Both buildings display architectural grace-notes that humanized and dignify that resident authority. We no longer believe in grace-notes for the things we build, so is it surprising that we live in a graceless society?

 

 

This is the power plant for the whole operation, on the premises, ensuring that the electricity would stay on at all times. In the early 20th century, electric power was the new sine qua non of advanced civilization. America’s rural electrification program really didn’t get underway until the 1930s, so it’s likely that many of the farms outside the village were not hooked up to a grid. The hospital generators must have been driven by coal, or perhaps oil. Somebody had to attend to all that machinery. The laundry ­– hospitals produce a lot of that – was also on-premises, as was all the meal preparation. The hospital maintained a large garden to furnish some of the food. All these tasks required crews of people working purposefully and getting paid. The hospital was a complex organism, a world within a nation within a world.

Things rise and self-organize beautifully into fully-formed systems and after while they run down, even while they over-grow; authority starts working more and more for its own sake and its own benefit; hierarchy breaks down into disrespect, lack of trust, fear; and then society loses its vital institutions, which is exactly what happened at Mary McClellan Hospital in little Cambridge, New York. It dwindled and then quickly collapsed. The town lost a part of itself, the part that welcomed people in a particular kind of trouble and cared for them, as it cared for those who did the caring. By the way, in 1919, a private room was $7-a-day (a bed on a ward was $3). Imagine that! The town also lost a vital component of its economy. And that was all of-a-piece with its decline into the flyover place it became in our time.

American health care, as we call it today, and for all its high-tech miracles, has evolved into one of the most atrocious rackets the world has ever seen. By racket, I mean an enterprise organized explicitly to make money dishonestly. This is what we’ve become, and the fact that we seem to be okay with that tells you more about what we have become. The advent of Covid-19, along with the extreme economic disorders it has triggered, will probably be the beginning of the end of that racket. We have no idea how medicine will re-organize itself, but I’d guess that it will happen at a much more primitive scale ­– because that’s usually what happens when human societies overshoot badly. Alas, history is not exactly symmetrical.

But read these photos and meditate on what we were once capable of putting together in this land, and maybe you will find some clues about what was truly admirable about the American condition before we stopped caring.

-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)
Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
20 Comments
realestatepup
realestatepup
April 13, 2020 11:51 am

This brings back memories of growing up in the “quiet corner” of NE CT in the 70’s and 80’s. As a child, my mother brought me and my brother to an old country doc in Woodstock CT, Dr. Bates. He was everything you pictured. Tall, gangly, partially bald, with glasses and a white coat. His office was located in his house. His nurse was a spinsterish woman with bad dentures but a sweet demeanor.

My mother told me his advice was fairly low-key and never centered around plying his patients with pharmaceuticals, but rather good, common-sense. When my mother brought my very picky eater brother to see him, very concerned that my brother was not eating, Doc Bates told her “he’ll eat when he’s hungry” and he did.
When Doc died my mother switched us to a younger, more modern doctor in the next town over, who had his fancy offices in a medical strip mall located close to the hospital.

I never liked him as a child, he was brusque, rude, and just plain arrogant. And suddenly my brother had ADD and was put on Ritalin, which was fairly new and becoming all the rage.

My brother grew slower than the other kids and this was a side-effect of that drug, which is plain and simply, speed. Anyone who fools themselves into thinking is not is an idiot.
.
My experience with modern medicine is a mixed bag. I went to college and learned phlebotomy, anatomy, and some basic medical procedures such as taking a blood pressure and a medical history. I had an internship with a local HMO and learned medical billing. THAT’S WHEN I DISCOVERED THE CON GAME OF MEDICAL BILLING.
Medical billing is the single largest scam ever perpetrated on the American public, plain and simple. You do not get a list of charges before you are treated. So they can just charge you whatever you want. The pretense of the patient being involved in their own care is farce, because if you cannot know what you will be paying for it, and if you can opt out of some of it, renders the entire thing ridiculous.

Folks, you would never take your car to a mechanic and not expect to know the charges. If you brought it in for a brake job and some muffler work, and then received some bill with codes on it akin to what might as well be a magical spell written widdershins, and told “that’s what it is, pay up” you wold be in court toot-sweet and suing!
Yet we take our one and only bodies, and just turn them over without nary a question and let whatever people show up poke, prod, palpate, irradiate, scan, tube, and medicate us into financial ruin.
These are the same people who are responsible for millions of injury and death through medical fuck ups every year. Data from 2013 shows 440,000 die each year from PREVENTABLE MEDICAL ERRORS:
https://www.hospitalsafetygrade.org/newsroom/display/hospitalerrors-thirdleading-causeofdeathinus-improvementstooslow?gclid=Cj0KCQjwm9D0BRCMARIsAIfvfIb8huIVTcYR1fRx3rEbFaKJ789vJkZUcX4nzTs9CXRBfd_3Q7xEfJAaAjZREALw_wcB

And yet we still walk through those sliding glass doors and blithely disrobe while god knows who does god knows what to us. Are we that stupid that we think everyone with an MD after their name is equally qualified?

And these are the same people insisting it’s in our best interest to listen to them. You know, like the mob insisting on “protecting us” from an “accident”.

The human body is not some great mystery. This is not the dark ages folks, where we are cupping, blood letting, and think sickness comes from vapors from swamps. Anything you want to know about how your body works can be found with a few key strokes.

Using that info, however, is another story entirely. Almost every single person actually believes that chemicals are the answer to whatever ails them. We are a nation of buck-passers. Why lose weight to prevent or cure our type 2 diabetes when we can take a pill or jab ourselves in the ass once a week? Why stop smoking, or cut back or drinking, or not eat crap food when we can take a pill?

We slather ourselves with chemicals to prevent skin cancer and yet skin cancer is still around and actually on the rise:
https://www.ewg.org/sunscreen/report/skin-cancer-on-the-rise/

Why? Well because we are now vitamin D deficient.

The corona virus is ravaging a sector of people who are not just old (that we can’t help) but fat and sick by their own hand.

I read that the virus is “disproportionately” affecting minorities. I wonder why that is?….
https://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/13/11/1144

And then there’s this:
https://www.usnews.com/news/healthiest-communities/articles/2019-12-04/for-black-women-hair-care-is-a-barrier-to-exercise-fighting-obesity
This was a serious article. Hair care is more important. The mind boggles.
It doesn’t help when someone like Lizzo is held up as a role model.

All of this brings me to my conclusion:

If you don’t get your head out of your fat, diabetic, smoking ass and start learning about your own body, and leave i in the hands of people who might actually kill you instead of help you, then you have no one to blame but yourself.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  realestatepup
April 13, 2020 12:07 pm

When I was a kid, pharmaceutical companies were not allowed to advertise their medicines. Once that restriction was removed, they massive growth started. Their salesmen pushed their wares on the Dr., wined them and dined them to insure they pushed their latest and greatest drugs. Let us not forget that Big Pharma spends more money buying politicians than any other group.

There was no such thing as ADD in flyover country in the 50’s. We had teachers who believed in discipline and made sure kids stayed in line. Kids respected (and some of them were feared) and towed the line. We were expected to learn in school and were held back if we did not meet the requirements to move on to the next grade.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  TN Patriot
April 13, 2020 6:34 pm

They also fund all the major medical schools – all they learn to do is prescribe prescribe prescribe. Although, I still wonder why all their lobby money and circular government – industry revolving door has not ended those disclaimers and warnings at the end of pharma commercials. Those are brutal. Ask you doctor what &^%^&* can do for you?

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  ILuvCO2
April 13, 2020 7:39 pm

My cholesterol runs from 175 – 210 and my Dr. has told me numerous times he wants to put me on Lipitor. I have to keep reminding him I do not take maintenance drugs.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  TN Patriot
April 13, 2020 8:23 pm

Your brain needs cholesterol.

realestatepup
realestatepup
  TN Patriot
April 14, 2020 9:07 am

Also another huge scam. I am very glad neither of my parents take this crap. Cholesterol drugs do not differentiate between cholesterol in your blood stream and cholesterol in your brain. It actually makes something akin to pin-holes. Do some research…I think you’ll see the rise of Alzheimer’s and other dementias correlate with the rise of intake of these drugs.
When I was in my mid-30’s my doc wanted to put me on lipitor. I looked her straight in the eye and said “are you fucking crazy?” and I never went back.
I also refuse to have my boobs irradiated on a yearly basis so said irradiation can now give me the very cancer I am trying to detect. Breast cancer does not run in my family, no one has ever had it, so why up the risk?
There are no safe drugs out there. They all have side effects, and some are worse than whatever the hell you are taking them for.
Yes, we need antibiotics (currently over prescribed), pain killers (again, over prescribed), and currently hydroxychloroquine to treat some serious situations.
But when I read the very sad statistic that 1 out of 4 of my fellow women are on anti-depressants I shudder. I personally have experienced depression a long time ago. In my late 20’s. I made the huge mistake of taking Paxil. Holy shit, never again. The crushing fatigue was debilitating. The metallic taste in my mouth. And then the itching. Good god, the itching. Which a small few experience and I was one of the lucky ones. And my hair fell out. Yeah, way to help being depressed when your mouth tastes like nickels, your patchy bald, and you can’t get out of bed. Super fun. And your sex drive tanks like a rock dropped off a building.
Almost every thing that is wrong with us is either natural aging or our own fault. Smoking, poor food choices, heavy drinking, drug use, lack of sunshine/vitamin D, lack of exercise. Those very few that are born with a genetic anomaly are the exception rather than the rule.

Chubby Bubbles
Chubby Bubbles
  realestatepup
April 13, 2020 5:40 pm

My dad was a doc like that. Sometimes he’d take payment in tomatoes (Italian-American area).

Whenever we complained about anything, he’d say, “put a cold cloth on it”.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
  realestatepup
April 14, 2020 1:01 am

Realestatepup, I truly appreciate your article. This is why I don’t use doctors nor pharmaceuticals.

Donkey
Donkey
April 13, 2020 12:20 pm

$7 in 1919 is $109 today.

How much is a bed for a day in a hospital nowadays?

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
  Donkey
April 13, 2020 1:59 pm

Between $3,000 and $7,500 depending on location.

splurge
splurge
  Donkey
April 13, 2020 2:13 pm

About the same as a week on the beach most places.

bigfoot
bigfoot
April 13, 2020 12:23 pm

Fabulous essay that hits the mark like an arrow in a socialist’s ribs.

Pequiste
Pequiste
April 13, 2020 12:33 pm

A beautiful essay that is a scathing, no, damning, indictment of our post-modern American Hyper-Finance Krony Kapitalism civilization.

Bilco
Bilco
April 13, 2020 3:46 pm

I think about things like that from time to time. Makes me wonder if I was born a hundred years too late. I wonder sometimes what my great great grandparents would say if they were to see the place where they settled. They built a beautiful Victorian style home,in a nice working class neighborhood. Now the Dindus have taken the area over,and every other house is either gone,burned out,or abandoned.

William Williams
William Williams
April 13, 2020 3:55 pm

>>>maybe you will find some clues about what was truly admirable about the American condition before we stopped caring.

But who, generally, stopped caring? I don’t believe it was me, but then again I’m 70 and never in a very influential position.

Perhaps the lack of caring blossomed among those whose job it is to maximize profits by any and all means that are not explicitly illegal. Or within the academic community, most of whom no longer even claim to seek “truth”… or even that truth can be said to exist. While the apparent nexus of our decline is the political class, who take their nit-wit ideologies from academe, and their money from the Kings of Finance, I suspect that “our” loss of caring is ultimately derived from the loss of religious faith, especially within the ruling strata.

BTW I’m a retired US physician, and will comment also that the negative opinions expressed here re the economics of American medicine are basically correct. I like to blame Big Pharma and Big Insurance, rather than lowly MDs, but the US system is corrupt, and will fail… very soon. FWIW, I found the US “health” system to be such a rip-off, that I felt compelled to spend the last 15 years of my career working abroad.

Donkey
Donkey
  William Williams
April 13, 2020 4:26 pm

“Or within the academic community, most of whom no longer even claim to seek “truth”… or even that truth can be said to exist.”

Hmm…

The Truth Does Not Exist. Cynical Much?

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 13, 2020 5:05 pm

Years ago, I visited the light industrial part of my city to get my car window repaired. The area dates at least as far back as the first quarter of the 20th century, and many of the buildings, which were mostly one story, were made of brick. Taking a walk around the neighborhood, I noted that the builders of these structures were concerned with more than mere utility. The facades were very attractive, with interesting details set in below the cornices. The area where I live has suddenly become very hot, and a lot of condos and apartment buildings have been hastily thrown up. Most are hideous squarish blocks with half the charm of those old buildings which now house auto repair shops. I personally look out my window at a graceful apartment house built circa 1910; a Tudor Revival-ish house sits to the right of it, so I am buffered a bit from the barbarian intrusion. But I can’t walk past these new buildings without becoming a little depressed.

ottomatik
ottomatik
April 13, 2020 10:40 pm

Well done and timely.